The Saudi-led coalition deserves the Nobel Peace Prize due to its crimes in Yemen, Abdulsalam added, in an apparent dig at Myanmar’s de facto leader, Aung Sang Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate whose silence on the ongoing atrocities has drawn international outcry.

On Sunday, five civilians were killed when Saudi warplanes bombed Shada’a District of Yemen’s northwestern province of Sa’ada, reports said.

The Yemeni army fired a medium-range Qaher M-2 ballistic missile at a Saudi airbase in the kingdom’s southwestern Asir Region on Saturday.

Reports said that the missile had precisely hit the target but Saudi media quoted Colonel Turki al-Malki, the Saudi-led coalition spokesman, as saying that the Saudi forces had intercepted the missile.

Additionally, the Yemeni army destroyed two military vehicles used by mercenaries supporting former Yemeni president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi in the northern and southwestern provinces of Jawf and Lahij.

The Yemeni army also launched a mortar attack against a gathering place for pro-Hadi forces in Lahij Province, inflicting heavy losses on the militants.

An armored vehicle, which belonged to pro-Hadi mercenaries, was destroyed in the Sirwah District of Yemen’s central Ma’rib Province.

Yemen has witnessed a deadly Saudi-led war since March 2015 to eliminate the Houthis and reinstall a Riyadh-friendly Hadi.

Saudi Arabia has achieved neither of the objectives despite spending billions of dollars on the war and enlisting the cooperation of dozens of its allies as well as Western countries.

The protracted Saudi offensive, which has been accompanied by a naval and aerial blockade on Yemen, has so far killed over 12,000 people and led to a humanitarian crisis and a cholera outbreak.